Subject: Reponses:
Author:
Posted on: 2022-08-24 15:04:15 UTC

(He was the most philanthropic person in the world in 2020, by the way.)

Forbes points out that his "donations" are pledges. The payout is long and slow, especially compared to how his ex-wife's philanthropy is going. He rates 1 on the Forbes philanthropy score, the worst score possible. He also has not signed the Giving Pledge to donate the majority of his wealth during his lifetime or in his will, unlike his ex-wife.

Well, you kinda make my point that wealthy people buy land in areas that are low-tax. I don’t know exactly what point would make it “too much,” but, clearly high taxes are a deterrent.

California has the highest income tax in the country but lower than average property tax. Rich people own land in California but park their money elsewhere to avoid California's income taxes. This is... not tenable for California's infrastructure, given how much of the state's resources they use to maintain their properties (Like water. During a drought.)

As for the “crumbling infrastructure”, we just passed a $65 billion dollar bill that has funding for those things. Bezos does have a more than 65 billion dollar net worth.

Yes, and we're going to get that money for infrastructure by raising taxes on the wealthy. Exactly my point.

Who exactly counts as “Bezos’ friends?”

I don't think he's personable enough to have friends, but I was more counting his billionaire peers like Musk, Zuckerberg, etc.

Where are you getting the data that Amazon employees are being exploited and cannot switch jobs? Because that is kinda the crux of the debate.

Exploitation. Job loss. It's not that they can't switch jobs, it's that Amazon is eliminating retail jobs, not to mention it acts predatorily against independent sellers who use its marketplace. It is changing the job landscape not just for working class people who staff its fulfillment centres but also for small business owners who use its marketplace, and that change is not going in the direction that ensures the most amount of jobs for workers.

Bezos is an Executive Chairman, which means that he is essentially a consultant for the new CEO. That’s something.

That is business talk for sometimes the CEO will email him with a question. It means nothing.

Or do you assume all rich people are exploitive?

Bluntly, yes. Intergenerational wealth in the United States comes at the cost of centuries of exploiting Black people and other people of colour. Studies have shown that the concentration of wealth isn't connected to productivity but rather exploitation. Even during the pandemic, the rich only got richer and the workers were left behind. And finally, North America continues to hold most of the world's wealth, and because of inheritance tax codes, the heirs of billionaires won't get a better deal outside the US.

Let's also not forget recent scandals about the ultra-wealthy taking private jet trips for 17 minutes or emitting tons of carbon. So yes. They are exploitative, even the ones whose music I like.

~Lily, whose aunt terrorises the local Chinese-American Chamber of Commerce, so she knows something about dealing with crazy rich Asians.

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